178 Misc. 512 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1942
This is a contested accounting proceeding. The first objection filed by the residuary legatees to the account is sustained. It raised a question as to the power and authority of the executors to withhold from distribution the sum of $24,770.72 representing the total of the Federal estate tax apportioned as against the general legatees by a prior decree in a proceeding for the construction of the will. In that proceeding there was . presented the specific question as to whether there was a direction in the will that the Federal and New York State estate taxes be paid out of the general estate and thus exclusively borne by the residuary legatees, or whether, in the absence of such a testamentary direction, the provisions of section 124 of the Decedent Estate Law should be applied and an allocation directed proportionally to the respective benefits of all of the general and residuary legatees.
In my decision in that proceeding I determined that section 124 was applicable because no contrary direction for the charging of the taxes had been made by the testator. (N. Y. L. J. June 10, 1941, p. 2604.) An appropriate decree carrying out such ruling was duly made on June 16, 1941. No appeal was taken from it by any of the parties.
Many months after the expiration of the time to appeal the Court of Appeals held in Matter of del Drago (287 N. Y. 61) that the terms of section 124 of the Decedent Estate Law violated the Federal Constitution. The executors now desire to withhold these moneys to await a determination of the appeal from that decision now pending in the United States Supreme Court.
In the Bankers Trust Co. case just cited, determinations by the United States Supreme Court of the unconstitutionality of State statutes attempting to lay a tax on the transfers of securities of corporations organized under the law of such State, but owned by a non-resident decedent, were made after the final order in the transfer tax proceeding. Thereupon the executors and trustees of the estate sought in effect to reopen the tax proceeding and to obtain a refund under the Tax Law. The existence of such a right was denied. The Court of Appeals followed its prior decision in People ex rel. Intenat. Salt Co. v. Graves (supra) and held that the unconstitutionality of the levy and the error of law which entered into the final order could not affect its conclusiveness.
Here likewise the decree construing the will is final, conclusive and res judicata. (Surr. Ct. Act, § 80.) It may not be reopened. (Matter of Brennan, 251 N. Y. 39; Matter of Starbuck, 248 id. 555.) A similar determination would be required to be made as to the conclusiveness of final decrees previously made in accounting proceedings which recognized the validity of section 124 of the Decedent Estate Law and directed an allocation of the Federal estate tax pursuant to its terms.
Distribution of the amount of the reserve of $24,770.72, which is now in the hands of the executors and earmarked as allocations
(Other directions included in the original decision of the surrogate omitted because of their subordinate importance.)
Submit decree on notice settling the account accordingly.